CANDLER SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY/EMORY UNIVERSITY

Financial Aid-Fellowships

A number of scholarships are available to graduate students at Emory University. Basic support includes tuition scholarships, generous stipends, and subsidized health insurance. Regular fellowship support covers the full cost of tuition and includes a generous annual stipend. Three additional fellowships are available: the Robert W. Woodruff Fellowship, the Emory Graduate Diversity Fellowship, and the Arts & Sciences Fellowship provide funding beyond the regular fellowships and cover 12 months of support. As long as students make satisfactory academic progress, the level of support they are awarded on admission can be renewed for up to five years (four in some programs). Individual Courses of Study determine which of their applicants to nominate for regular fellowships as well as for special fellowships. A faculty review committee in Laney Graduate School makes the final selections.

Other sources of financial support available include Professional Development Support Funds and Advanced Student Fellowships. Professional Development Support (PDS) Funds offer graduate students support for activities beyond their regular coursework and research that contribute to their development as scholars and professionals. These activities include attending conferences, travel expenses relating to research, obtaining additional training, and other research expenses. These funds are available by application. Students can receive up to $2,500 over the course of their program of study. Application for these funds requires the recommendation of the student’s advisor. Additional funding beyond the $2,500 is available through a competitive application process. The Laney Graduate School, sometimes in cooperation with other Emory entities, offers a number of advanced student fellowships. These are one-year fellowships designed for students who have exhausted their "regular" fellowships but need one more year of support to complete their degrees.

Hispanic/Latino Faculty

Hispanic Centers and Programs

Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program at Emory University (LACS)-This program has had a strong tradition of sponsoring exhibits, lectures, symposia, and performances that reflect the research interests of our affiliated faculty. The core faculty of thirty-one Latin-Americanists represents one of largest groups of faculty associated with an area studies program at Emory University.

Library Resources-Special Collections

Electronic Databases at Emory University libraries include access to the Handbook of Latin American Studies and the Hispanic American Periodicals Index (HAPI).

Other Resources

African, Hispanic, Asian and Native American-Dance (AHANA)-to provide a forum for students’ creative expression from a cultural perspective and to promote unity, harmony and diversity at Emory through performance

Association of Caribbean Educators (ACES)- serves as a support group for Caribbean students at Emory University, a vehicle of communication to each other the general student body and public, about the history and issues of the Caribbean, in order to dispel harmful and false stereotypes, and a network with other students of the Caribbean.

Latino Student Organization-assembles all students with an interest in Latino issues, including, but not limited to, culture, politics, social issues, and philanthropy.